Potential for Glove Risk Amplification via Direct Physical, Chemical, and Microbiological Contamination

IF 2.1 4区 农林科学 Q3 BIOTECHNOLOGY & APPLIED MICROBIOLOGY
Barry S. Michaels , Troy Ayers , Jenna Brooks-McLaughlin , Ryan J. McLaughlin , Katherine Sandoval-Warren , Casey Schlenker , Lynda Ronaldson , Steve Ardagh
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

This review focuses on the potential direct physical, chemical, and microbiological contamination from disposable gloves when utilized in food environments, inclusive of the risks posed to food products as well as worker safety. Unrecognized problems endemic to glove manufacturing were magnified during the COVID-19 pandemic due to high demand, increased focus on PPE performance, availability, supply chain instability, and labor shortages. Multiple evidence-based reports of contamination, toxicity, illness, deaths, and related regulatory action linked to contaminated gloves in food and healthcare have highlighted problems indicative of systemic glove industry shortcomings. The glove manufacturing process was diagramed with sources and pathways of contamination identified, indicating weak points with documented occurrences detailed. Numerous unsafe ingredients can introduce chemical contaminants, potentially posing risks to food and to glove users. Microbial hazards present significant challenges to overall glove safety as contaminants appear to be introduced via polluted water sources or flawed glove manufacturing processes, resulting in increased risks within food and healthcare environments. Frank and opportunistic pathogens along with food spoilage organisms can be introduced to foods and wearers. When the sources and pathways of glove−borne contamination were explored, it was found that physical failures play a pivotal role in the release of sweat build-up, liquefaction of chemical residues, and incubation of microbial contaminants from hands and gloves. Thus, with glove physical integrity issues, including punctures in new, unused gloves that can develop into significant rips and tears, not only can direct physical food contamination occur but also chemical and microbiological contamination can find their way into food. Enhanced regulatory requirements for Acceptable Quality Limits of food−grade gloves, and the establishment of appropriate bioburden standards would enhance safety in food applications. Based on the information provided, together with a false sense of security associated with glove use, the unconditional belief in glove chemical and microbiological purity may be unfounded.

通过直接物理、化学和微生物污染放大手套风险的可能性。
本综述侧重于一次性手套在食品环境中使用时可能造成的直接物理、化学和微生物污染,包括对食品和工人安全造成的风险。在 COVID-19 大流行期间,由于需求量大、对个人防护设备性能和可用性的关注度增加、供应链不稳定以及劳动力短缺,手套生产中普遍存在的未认识到的问题被放大。有关食品和医疗保健领域手套污染、毒性、疾病、死亡和相关监管行动的多份循证报告,突出表明了手套行业存在系统性缺陷的问题。手套生产流程的图解确定了污染的来源和途径,指出了薄弱环节,并详细记录了发生的情况。许多不安全的成分会带来化学污染物,对食品和手套使用者构成潜在风险。微生物危害给整体手套安全带来了重大挑战,因为污染物似乎是通过污染的水源或有缺陷的手套制造工艺引入的,导致食品和医疗环境中的风险增加。弗兰克病原体和机会性病原体以及食品腐败菌可能会进入食品和佩戴者体内。在探究手套污染的来源和途径时发现,物理故障在汗液积聚释放、化学残留物液化以及手和手套微生物污染物的孵化方面起着关键作用。因此,如果手套存在物理完整性问题,包括新的未使用过的手套被刺破,进而发展成严重的撕裂和撕裂,不仅会造成直接的物理食品污染,而且化学和微生物污染也会进入食品。加强对食品级手套可接受质量限值的监管要求,并制定适当的生物负载标准,将提高食品应用的安全性。根据所提供的信息,再加上与手套使用相关的虚假安全感,无条件相信手套的化学和微生物纯度可能是没有根据的。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Journal of food protection
Journal of food protection 工程技术-生物工程与应用微生物
CiteScore
4.20
自引率
5.00%
发文量
296
审稿时长
2.5 months
期刊介绍: The Journal of Food Protection® (JFP) is an international, monthly scientific journal in the English language published by the International Association for Food Protection (IAFP). JFP publishes research and review articles on all aspects of food protection and safety. Major emphases of JFP are placed on studies dealing with: Tracking, detecting (including traditional, molecular, and real-time), inactivating, and controlling food-related hazards, including microorganisms (including antibiotic resistance), microbial (mycotoxins, seafood toxins) and non-microbial toxins (heavy metals, pesticides, veterinary drug residues, migrants from food packaging, and processing contaminants), allergens and pests (insects, rodents) in human food, pet food and animal feed throughout the food chain; Microbiological food quality and traditional/novel methods to assay microbiological food quality; Prevention of food-related hazards and food spoilage through food preservatives and thermal/non-thermal processes, including process validation; Food fermentations and food-related probiotics; Safe food handling practices during pre-harvest, harvest, post-harvest, distribution and consumption, including food safety education for retailers, foodservice, and consumers; Risk assessments for food-related hazards; Economic impact of food-related hazards, foodborne illness, food loss, food spoilage, and adulterated foods; Food fraud, food authentication, food defense, and foodborne disease outbreak investigations.
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